RHS Flower Show Tatton Park episode 2 2018

More highlights from the RHS Flower Show Tatton Park as the winner of the Best Show Garden is revealed and revel in the exotic as the team look at tender plants that fill our late summer borders with colour and texture. Exploring the Discover and Grow marquee, the team uncover the varieties of fruit and vegetables packed with flavour and ideal to grow in our gardens at home and if you are experiencing a glut with your harvest don't worry - we have the solution with a master class in pickling.



And this episode sees the final of the RHS Young Designer of the Year competition, capturing the moment one of the five talented fresh-faced designers receives the career-making award.

RHS Flower Show Tatton Park episode 2 2018


RHS Flower Show Tatton Park held at Tatton Park, near Knutsford, Cheshire, first began in 1999 by the Royal Horticultural Society. The show houses the RHS National Flower Bed Competition, Young Designer of the Year Award and a wide range of inspirational show gardens, smaller 'Back to Back' gardens, visionary gardens and a number of marquees displaying prize plants and flora exhibits. Other key features of the show are the floral marquee and plant plaza, the arts and heritage pavilion, and the floral design studio.

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The first Tatton Show had been planned for 1998, but in the event it was decided to concentrate on Scotland first. The late Max de Soissons (who died in his early 50s in June 2012), an experienced organiser of trade exhibitions, who had been hired in 1996 as the RHS manager for the BBC Gardeners’ World Live show in Birmingham, was appointed the Tatton Show manager.

At the first Tatton Show in 1999, there were 12 show gardens, 16 back-to-back gardens (distinct from the small gardens at Birmingham or the courtyard gardens at Chelsea), 77 nurseries in the main marquee, ten rose growers in the Royal National Rose Show (sponsored by Manchester Airport), 200 sundries stands, some 20 plant societies in a specialist societies marquee, and about 30 national collections represented in a heritage marquee, and a crafts pavilion sponsored by Country Living magazine, and a separate furniture pavilion. 70,000 visitors were expected, and 102,000 arrived. Tatton, the RHS staff agreed, had the friendliest atmosphere of any of the Society’s shows.

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